Oswaldo Cabrera could be the Yankees’ third baseman in 2025.Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post
“Ideally not like to move Dominguez as much,” Boone said. “But we’ll see how it all shakes out.”
There is still plenty that needs to shake out in the Yankees infield.
They have subtracted Gleyber Torres (who left in free agency) and prospect Caleb Durbin (in a trade) and have not added a surefire starter.
They have been linked with free agents Jorge Polanco and Brendan Rodgers, among others, and the Cardinals seem intent on moving Nolan Arenado.
Yankees veteran DJ LeMahieu is in the field in the fourth inning against the Rays during a game last season.Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
Without a further addition, Boone said he would move Chisholm back to second base — where he played his best defensively with the Marlins — after Chisholm learned third base on the fly after the deadline trade last season.
Boone identified Oswaldo Cabrera, DJ LeMahieu and Oswald Peraza, in that order, as the potential third basemen.
Cabrera took steps last season, posting a .742 OPS in the second half and looked more comfortable against major league pitching, but part of his use to the team has been an ability to play everywhere. His winning the third base job might require the Yankees to find another super utility guy.
LeMahieu is coming off his worst season as a pro and among the worst seasons in the majors, finishing with a .527 OPS and two home runs in 67 games. The two-time batting champion is 36, but the Yankees hope his problem has been injury rather than aging.
“DJ has been an amazing hitter. He’s just been hurt,” Boone said of LeMahieu, who missed about two months with a fracture in his foot then saw his season end early due to a right hip impingement. “Hopefully with some health, some of that bat can return because he can still really defend. … Whether it’s on an everyday level or if it’s against a [lefty], I do think there’s a role for him.”
Peraza has yet to hit well in the majors and might be facing his final chance to stick with the Yankees because he has no more minor league options.
With Torres in Detroit, the Yankees do not have a natural leadoff man. Boone acknowledged plenty of hitters could step up, and he mentioned lefty-hitting Chisholm and the switch-hitting Dominguez as possibilities. Righty-hitting Anthony Volpe saw some time in the slot last year.
“It depends who solves that leadoff spot,” Boone said. “Is it one guy? Or is it one guy versus a righty, one guy versus a lefty?”